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Jerusalem Watch: Crackdown In Palestinian Territories

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  • Jerusalem Watch: Crackdown In Palestinian Territories

    JERUSALEM WATCH: CRACKDOWN IN PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES

    theTrumpet.com
    August 15, 2008
    OK

    Olmert's latest attempt to create a Palestinian state; the greatest
    threat facing Jerusalem; plus, look who's violating human rights in
    the West Bank and Gaza. By Stephen Flurry

    JERUSALEM--The other day, I bumped into an American contractor while
    crossing into Jordan's southernmost city of Aqaba. As we were leaving
    Israel, the man seemed relieved.

    "I can't believe the unbearable conditions Palestinians are forced
    to live under in the West Bank," he intoned. He told us there were
    640 Israeli checkpoints throughout the West Bank. We had just passed
    through three checkpoints on our three-hour drive through the West
    Bank, from Jerusalem to Eilat.

    When we asked him about his source for the 640 figure, he said he got
    it from the United Nations. That prompted this response from one of my
    co-workers: "Do you believe everything the United Nations tells you?"

    That ended the conversation.

    Even if the figure is grossly inflated, no one, of course, can argue
    that checkpoints and security barriers make it inconvenient for
    honest, hard-working Palestinians (or tourists, for that matter). But
    from Israel's perspective, it's hard to argue with the impact these
    restrictions have had on preventing terror attacks. Since constructing
    its "wall of defense" in response to the second intifada, suicide
    bombings have virtually ground to a halt. Last year, for example,
    Palestinian terrorists killed 13 Israelis, compared to 426 in 2002.

    At the same time, Israel's Gaza pullout in 2005 and its latest offer
    of 93 percent of the West Bank to the Palestinian Authority indicates
    Israel is determined to give away territory if it thinks it will
    result in peace.

    In the Palestinian territories, meanwhile, the situation on the
    ground is fast becoming unbearable, but not because of long lines
    and interrogations at Israeli checkpoints. In a Wall Street Journal
    opinion piece last week, former Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky
    and Palestinian human rights activist Bassem Eid summarized the
    internecine violence in the Palestinian territories since the start
    of the second intifada eight years ago: "122 killed in the streets
    (suspected collaborators), 41 by capital punishment, 34 honor killings,
    48 stabbed to death, seven beaten to death, 258 killed under mysterious
    circumstances and 818 cases of gunfire. So far no one has been charged
    let alone tried for any of these unlawful killings" (emphasis mine).

    As Robert Fulford recently wrote in Canada's National Post, "The
    appalling fact, only fitfully reported in North America, is that the
    two major Palestinian factions are committed to an often murderous
    conflict."

    In recent weeks, the violence has only worsened. According to an
    Associated Press report on Tuesday, there has been a "widening
    crackdown" against dissent in the Palestinian territories led by
    Fatah in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza. The ap wrote,

    The crackdown began after a July 25 beachside bomb killed five Hamas
    militants in Gaza. Hamas blamed Western-backed Fatah and rounded up
    scores of Fatah activists in Gaza. Fatah-allied security forces in
    the West Bank responded by seizing dozens of Hamas supporters.

    The U.S. and Europe have said little about violations in the West Bank,
    even as they're spending millions of dollars on police training to
    help lay the foundations of a democratic Palestine.

    Hamas and Fatah claim that these are just routine "security" measures,
    the article says. But according to at least two human rights reports,
    security forces in both territories have been systematically torturing
    their detainees. "Analysts say a desire to prevent the West Bank from
    falling to Islamists appears to override other Western concerns,"
    ap wrote.

    In the case of Western media outlets, anti-Israeli bias appears to
    be overriding concerns about Palestinian human rights violations. As
    Sharansky and Eid pointed out in their piece,

    When one of us [Bassem Eid] worked for Israel's Betselem cataloging
    Israel's human-rights violations, the international community embraced
    every report. But when intellectual honesty demanded that he monitor
    Palestinian human-rights violations according to the same standards,
    no one was interested. Those reports were dismissed as undermining
    the Palestinian leaders--first Arafat and now Mr. Abbas--who would
    make peace with Israel.

    Beside that, there have been reported cases where Palestinians forcibly
    prevent journalists from observing the facts. ap notes,

    Last week, Hamas imposed a closed military zone in the Gaza City
    neighborhood where Hamas forces had raided a Fatah-allied stronghold
    after hours of heavy fighting. The ban prevented photographers
    and camera crews from documenting often violent house-to-house
    searches. Several residents alleged that money, gold and computers
    were stolen by Hamas troops.

    These human rights violations make Israeli checkpoints seem like a
    day at the amusement park.

    Palestinians Reject Olmert's Offer

    On Tuesday, Haaretz reported that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
    offered Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas 93 percent of
    the West Bank for a future Palestinian state. In return for the 7
    percent Israel would keep (where its largest settlements are located),
    the Palestinians would receive a strip of land in the Negev adjacent
    to the Gaza Strip. The proposed border would pretty much follow the
    route of the security barrier Israel has already erected. The plan
    would require around 70,000 settlers living east of the fence to
    be removed from their homes--about nine times the number that were
    removed from the Gaza Strip.

    The Palestinians would also be given a checkpoint-free passageway
    connecting the Gaza Strip to the West Bank.

    The Israeli proposal, however, would not take effect until Abbas's
    Fatah forces regained control of the Gaza Strip from Hamas. It also
    failed to settle the final status of Jerusalem.

    As an excellent gauge of how far apart the two sides are from ever
    establishing side-by-side states through negotiation, one only need
    examine the Palestinians' quick and emphatic response to Olmert's
    offer. The reported details of the agreement were "baseless,"
    Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat told Agence France Presse. Abbas's
    spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, said Olmert's proposal was "not
    acceptable," called it "a waste of time" and said it demonstrated a
    "lack of seriousness" on Israel's part.

    Erakat outlined Palestinian demands in his interview: "We want a
    complete Israeli withdrawal from the territories it occupied in 1967,
    including Jerusalem, and agreement on all the final status questions."

    With Olmert desperate to get a deal in place before he leaves
    office--which doesn't exactly allow him to operate from a position
    of strength--expect the Palestinians to hold out for their demands
    without budging an inch.

    In 2000, remember, Yasser Arafat held his ground with Ehud
    Barak until the Palestinians had most of the West Bank and East
    Jerusalem--including more than half of the Old City--within their
    grasp. Even then, Arafat rejected U.S.-Israeli proposals, saying,
    "I will not agree to any Israeli sovereign presence in Jerusalem,
    neither in the Armenian quarter, nor in the al-Aqsa Mosque, neither
    in Via Dolorosa, nor in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. They can
    occupy us by force, because we are weaker now, but in two years, ten
    years, or one hundred years, there will be someone who will liberate
    Jerusalem" (memri, Aug. 28, 2000).

    Instead of giving his people their own state, Arafat ordered a violent
    uprising that triggered the second intifada, killing more than 1,000
    Jews over the next five years.

    Jerusalem's Greatest Threat

    Last Sunday was Tisha B'Av in Israel, when Jews fast to commemorate
    the destruction of both the first and second temples. The book of
    Jeremiah says that Babylon burned Solomon's temple and the houses
    of Jerusalem on the 10th of Av (Jeremiah 52:12-14), but according to
    the Jewish tradition, the destruction began on the 9th and the city
    was finally consumed by fire the next day.

    The same is true for the second temple, destroyed by the Romans on
    the 9th and 10th of Av, in a.d. 70, according to the Talmud.

    In synagogues on Tisha B'Av, Jews read from the Old Testament book of
    Lamentations. "It was written by the Prophet Jeremiah," Arutz Sheva
    writes, "who warned Jews to repent to prevent the fall of Jerusalem,
    which he [prophesied]. His advice not only was ignored, but he also
    was imprisoned for stating views that threatened the king's power."

    Even though a third temple has not been built in Jerusalem,
    Ynetnews.com says "there are people who are already concerned with the
    next destruction." According to a survey conducted by the website,
    42 percent of Israeli respondents believe the possible division of
    Jerusalem is the greatest threat to the city's existence.

    As our regular readers know, Bible prophecy says the city will be cut
    in half and that it will ultimately lead to the city's destruction
    (Zechariah 14:1-2). What happened in Jerusalem during the sixth
    century b.c., and then again in a.d. 70, was only a type of what God
    says will happen again in this end time.

    Final Thought

    After spending the summer in Jerusalem, I will be returning to America
    this weekend. TheTrumpet.com, however, still has two contributors
    staffing our Jerusalem office. With their help, we hope to continue
    with these weekly dispatches so that you might continue watching
    Jerusalem.
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